He called the dot-com bubble in the US leading up to 2000, when the S&P 500 began its 50% decline. He also predicted a bubble in Japanese stocks in the late 1980s that finally popped in 1990.
Considering the growing scepticism of AI, it’s hard not to draw analogies between the AI hype and the dot-com bubble. Here's ...
The dot-com bubble ... technology and online commerce industries. It’s always difficult to identify a single catalyst that causes the bursting of an asset bubble, but in the case of the internet ...
All figures quoted in US dollars unless otherwise stated ... It soared by 33% in 1997 and then by 29% in 1998, fueled by the dot-com internet bubble, which drove technology stocks to astonishing ...
This time, the generative-AI bubble may really be different than the dot-com bubble — just not ... as we have become accustomed to buying online. Put these numbers together and the internet ...
Marks observed that of the top 20 publicly traded US companies at the beginning of 2000, right before the dot-com bubble popped, only six remain in the top 20 rankings.
The United States stock market is increasingly becoming ... growth for internet-based companies, known as the dot-com bubble. This speculative frenzy saw tech startups skyrocket in valuation ...
Stock market rally faces reality check as equity risk premium turns negative, sparking debates about potential overvaluation and potential echoes of dot-com bubble.
It soared by 33% in 1997 and then by 29% in 1998, fueled by the dot-com internet bubble, which drove technology stocks to astonishing valuations. The stock market is more rational this time around ...